The present study investigated the effects of L1-L2 congruency, collocation type, and restriction on L2 collocational processing. Advanced Chinese learners of English and native English-speaking controls performed an online acceptability judgment task to investigate how advanced L2 learners processed congruent (sharing the same meaning and structure in L1 language) collocations and English-only (not equivalent in L1 construction) collocations with the same node (right) word and a different collocate (left). The experimental materials included verb-noun (VN), adjective-noun (AN) collocations, free (less fixed), and restricted (more fixed) collocations chosen from BNC. The results revealed that (i) The non-native speakers were sensitive to L1...
This article assesses the influence of L1 intralexical knowledge on the formation of L2 intralexical...
© 2015, © The Author(s) 2015. Objectives: The study was intended to test the hypothesis that L2 spea...
Collocational deficiency is a pervasive phenomenon in learner English. Language learners often fail ...
The current study aimed to investigate the influence of L1 on the processing of L2 collocations util...
Abstract: Though collocations have drawn much attention in the field of language acquisition, yet d...
Collocations are words that have a tendency to co-occur within a few words’ spans, e.g., “drink coff...
Mastering collocations is one of the most challenging aspects of vocabulary acquisition, especially ...
Mastery of collocations is one of the native like features of the target language, and collocation h...
Multiple test tasks are available for assessing L2 collocation knowledge. However, few studies have ...
Abstract: This article presents a series of studies focusing on L2 production and processing of adje...
Collocation learning has long been recognised as a problematic domain for even high-level learners a...
Various studies have consistently shown that collocations are processed faster than matched control ...
The mastery offormulaic sequences by language learners is considered to be crucial since itenables t...
Collocations have been extensively studied in research on writing and second language acquisition, ...
L1 influence on second language acquisition has been shown by linguists in many areas. This study is...
This article assesses the influence of L1 intralexical knowledge on the formation of L2 intralexical...
© 2015, © The Author(s) 2015. Objectives: The study was intended to test the hypothesis that L2 spea...
Collocational deficiency is a pervasive phenomenon in learner English. Language learners often fail ...
The current study aimed to investigate the influence of L1 on the processing of L2 collocations util...
Abstract: Though collocations have drawn much attention in the field of language acquisition, yet d...
Collocations are words that have a tendency to co-occur within a few words’ spans, e.g., “drink coff...
Mastering collocations is one of the most challenging aspects of vocabulary acquisition, especially ...
Mastery of collocations is one of the native like features of the target language, and collocation h...
Multiple test tasks are available for assessing L2 collocation knowledge. However, few studies have ...
Abstract: This article presents a series of studies focusing on L2 production and processing of adje...
Collocation learning has long been recognised as a problematic domain for even high-level learners a...
Various studies have consistently shown that collocations are processed faster than matched control ...
The mastery offormulaic sequences by language learners is considered to be crucial since itenables t...
Collocations have been extensively studied in research on writing and second language acquisition, ...
L1 influence on second language acquisition has been shown by linguists in many areas. This study is...
This article assesses the influence of L1 intralexical knowledge on the formation of L2 intralexical...
© 2015, © The Author(s) 2015. Objectives: The study was intended to test the hypothesis that L2 spea...
Collocational deficiency is a pervasive phenomenon in learner English. Language learners often fail ...